Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Dafydd ap Gwilym
View through CrossRef
Abstract
One of the great innovators of medieval literature, Dafydd ap Gwilym's poetic voice is as distinctive and resonant as those of his more celebrated contemporaries Chaucer and Boccaccio. This book - the first major study of the largely submerged popular verse tradition of medieval Wales and its likely enriching effect on the repertoire of the professional poets - examines Dafydd's use both of the native popular verse tradition and of the persuasive convention of northern French verse to forge a new kind of poetry for a new age. Composing in the wake of the Edwardian conquest of Wales, Dafydd (fl. c. 1330-70) and a few kindred spirits sought to adapt and revitalize an already sophisticated bardic culture by expanding its subject matter to include a surprising variety of entertainment as well as formal praise. Huw M. Edwards sets out the first detailed comparison of Dafydd's verse with the highly influential poetry of northern France, in terms of themes, motifs and poetic genres since the publication of the authentic canon in 1952. The poet's bold and often playful handling of borrowed conventions will be of interest to all students of medieval poetry.
Title: Dafydd ap Gwilym
Description:
Abstract
One of the great innovators of medieval literature, Dafydd ap Gwilym's poetic voice is as distinctive and resonant as those of his more celebrated contemporaries Chaucer and Boccaccio.
This book - the first major study of the largely submerged popular verse tradition of medieval Wales and its likely enriching effect on the repertoire of the professional poets - examines Dafydd's use both of the native popular verse tradition and of the persuasive convention of northern French verse to forge a new kind of poetry for a new age.
Composing in the wake of the Edwardian conquest of Wales, Dafydd (fl.
c.
1330-70) and a few kindred spirits sought to adapt and revitalize an already sophisticated bardic culture by expanding its subject matter to include a surprising variety of entertainment as well as formal praise.
Huw M.
Edwards sets out the first detailed comparison of Dafydd's verse with the highly influential poetry of northern France, in terms of themes, motifs and poetic genres since the publication of the authentic canon in 1952.
The poet's bold and often playful handling of borrowed conventions will be of interest to all students of medieval poetry.
Related Results
Dafydd AP Gwilym
Dafydd AP Gwilym
Until recent years Dafydd ap Gwilym was the only Welsh poet with a high reputation outside Wales. This was not so strange. He fitted into the conventional picture of medieval poetr...
External Influences and Analogues: II
External Influences and Analogues: II
Abstract
The cywydd to the lark discussed in the previous chapter is one of the finest illustrations of Dafydd ap Gwilym’s deep religious reverence for the natural w...
Satirical Verse
Satirical Verse
Abstract
In view of the, albeit prejudiced, evidence of the Bardic Grammar and of the bards themselves, there can be little doubt that the Cler were notorious for th...
Dafydd AP Gwilym
Dafydd AP Gwilym
To get to Wales is a morning’s journey from London. Yet to reach the Welsh that is the language of the poets is one of the rarer English achievements. Returning anthropologists are...
Popular Entertainers 1n Medieval Wales
Popular Entertainers 1n Medieval Wales
Abstract
For the professional poets of medieval Wales the fourteenth century was a time of redefinition and innovation. The cywydd poetry of this period owes its rem...
Sir Winston Churchill’s doctors on the Riviera 1949–1965: Herbert Robert Burnett Gibson (1885–1967) and Dafydd (David) Myrddin Roberts (1906–1977)
Sir Winston Churchill’s doctors on the Riviera 1949–1965: Herbert Robert Burnett Gibson (1885–1967) and Dafydd (David) Myrddin Roberts (1906–1977)
In May 1940, Sir Charles McMoran Wilson (later Lord Moran) was on the instigation of Lord Max Beaverbrook and Brendan Bracken, (both patients, then friends of Wilson) introduced to...
The genus Bauhinia s.l. (Leguminosae): a phylogeny based on the plastid trnL–trnF region
The genus Bauhinia s.l. (Leguminosae): a phylogeny based on the plastid trnL–trnF region
As the largest genus in tribe Cercideae, the pantropical genus Bauhinia has been the subject of a number of regional treatments in which it has been recognized either as a single g...
The Ramakrishna Math and Ramakrishna Mission
The Ramakrishna Math and Ramakrishna Mission
The Ramakrishna Math and Ramakrishna Mission, together known as the Ramakrishna movement, attribute the source of their inspiration to Sri Ramakrishna (b. c.1836–d. 1886; see the s...

